A discussion of all things Lakewood and East Dallas from Advocate Magazines

Nov 13, 2008

Contest winners: Guess how Siegel voted

We had a tie -- David Kindle and Geena
Hawryluk each picked four of the five races correctly, and each missed
the tie-breaker. They'll both get $50 gift certificates to The Grape.
The winner of the consolation prize for least accurate entry was
volunteer blogger Norm Alston, who picked two races correctly and
missed the tiebreaker. He gets a $20 gift certificate.

This
turned out to be one of the most popular contests we've ever had. Maybe
it was the prize. I was curious, of course, to see if people could tell
if my political analysis here was politically motivated, and I'm happy
to say that they couldn't. In fact, several people made that point on
their entries.

A note about the answers, which come after the
jump. The presidential race was a trick question, since I wrote in Al
Gore. Anyone who said I voted for a third-party candidate would have
gotten credit for a correct answer. I do think it's interesting that
every entry said I voted for Barack Obama. The other race that made me
smile was the tie-breaker, in which two-thirds of the entrants said I
voted for Ed Oakley. Short memories, apparently, since I took
tremendous grief during the mayor's race for my criticism about Oakley.
I was described as bitter, which was one of the kindest cuts.

• President: Al Gore (any third party candidate would have been OK)

• U.S. House: Eric Roberson

• Dallas county sheriff: Lowell Cannaday

• State house: Allen Vaught

• State senate: John Carona

• Tiebreaker -- 2007 Dallas mayor’s race: Tom Leppert

For the record, that was two Democrats, two Republicans, and a third-party vote.

Comments

Leppert's a Republican. You know, I know it, everbody knows it. He may not run as one in the supposedly "non-partisan" mayor's race, but he is one just the same. So to just ignore that self-evident fact is a little disingenuous, don't you think?